Jesus himself is ‘heaven’ in the deepest and
truest sense of the word—he in whom and through whom God’s will is wholly done.
Looking at him, we realize that left to ourselves we can never be completely
just: the gravitational pull of our own will constantly draws us away from
God’s will and turns us into mere ‘earth’.
But he accepts us, he draws us up to himself,
into himself, and in communion with him we too learn God’s will. Thus, what we
are actually praying for in the third petition of the Our Father is that we
come closer and closer to him, so that God’s will can conquer the downward pull
of our selfishness and make us capable of the lofty height to which we are
called.
Pope Benedict XVI, Jesus of Nazareth Vol. 1, p. 150
Reflection – Nice to have a little of the ol’ German
Shepherd blogging from time to time. I still have hundreds of quotes from Pope
Benedict stored away on my laptop. This one is from his commentary on the Our
Father and the petition ‘thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven.’
It’s the
end of the liturgical year, and if you’re one who gets to church during the
week, you know that the readings are all focussing on the apocalyptic dimension
of our faith, the whole awareness that the here and now and the ‘what is’ is
temporary, transient. We are moving, slow or fast, in God’s own time, to ‘what
will be’ – something very different, and the process of getting there—based on
the Scriptures we have been given—will not be without its difficulties and
turmoil.
There is
always, and quite properly, an apocalyptic thread in the Christian tapestry.
Simply, we are not trying to create some perfect life here on earth, simply
fixing up the ‘here and now’ so that by our own efforts a nice little cozy
world gets set up. Yes, we strive for justice and peace, but that’s simply out
of love for our brothers and sisters and a desire to reduce the suffering
injustice and war cause.
To be a
Christian is to be well aware that the final resolution of all the world’s woes
lies outside of the world and in this mysterious other reality. Call it
heaven—we have to call it something—but truly we know little about it. Except
that it is where Jesus is, and it is Jesus who will bring us and ultimately all
the earth to the heavenly state.
And this
heavenly state is not just ‘an end to suffering and want’. It is to do the
Father’s will perfectly. And it is Jesus who achieves this in us, both showing
us what it looks like (cough ‘the
crucifix’ cough), and communicating
his life and heart to us so we can walk that path of obediential love.
The
question that faces all of us, of course, is whether or not this is really the
life we want. Is it genuinely ‘heaven’ to wholly abandon one’s own self-will
and give oneself over entirely to the will of God? This is a huge spiritual
question that fundamentally shapes each human life. ‘Better to reign in hell
than serve in heaven’, Milton’s Satan says. We can say that, too.
Ultimately
the question is whether or not we believe in the absolute goodness, justice,
and mercy of God. God is not just some ‘OK’ guy, some sort of nice person
vaguely up there. God is Goodness itself, perfect justice, absolute mercy. Only
that sort of God can both ask our total and absolute obedience, ask us to dwell
in His will utterly and unreservedly, and make of His will for us a genuine
heaven—a place of absolute light, joy, peace, gladness, goodness.
It all
comes down to our concept of God. And Jesus comes in there, too, to show us
something of who this God is, who the Father is, as much as our rather feeble
minds can absorb, and enough to at least get us to trust Him enough to let Him
in. His grace then can come in, and carry us the rest of the way there.
Happy Thanksgiving,
my American readers – as you all gather around the sacred turkey today, do
remember to give thanks to God above all for Jesus who makes it all possible,
who truly does open heaven to us and who bears us there on the wings of his
love and mercy. Amen.
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